~2- . skeletons of all but very young children were formed prior to the introduction of Sr-90 to the soil. Moreover, bone being formed at the present time utilizes calcium which left the soil in months gone by. The fact that cattle may be fed on hay many months old and the hold-up of human foods in the comercial distribution system are but two of many factors which would lead one to expect the human Sr-90 burden to lag in time behind the potential value which might ultimately be expected from a given soil concentration. The human skeleton cannot be expected to respond quickly to the gradual accretion of Sr-90 by soil. Equilibrium can be expected to be achieved over a period of years but not over a period of months. In the United States, as in a number of other parts of the world where the population derives much of its calcium from dairy products, analyses of milk for Sr-90 provide a convenient method of estimating the levels of himan absorption which may be expected in the future. During periods of actual fallout the concentration of Sr-90 in milk originates from two sources: the Sr~-90 level may have been metabolized from the soil by normal root uptake or it may have short circuited the soil by having been deposited directly on the leaf with which it is ingested by tne cow. The presence of the latter fraction is dependent on current fallout. If all detonations ceased, the fraction due to direct deposition on the leaf surfaces would diminish with the reduction in the rate of fallout. With the cessation of fallout this fraction would be

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